Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

St Lawrence's Church, West Wycombe

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Location
  
West Wycombe

Denomination
  
Church of England

Opened
  
3 July 1763

Designated as world heritage site
  
9 January 1954

Architect
  
Nicholas Revett

Country
  
England

Dedication
  
St Lawrence

Phone
  
+44 1494 713447

Heritage designation
  
Listed building

St Lawrence's Church, West Wycombe

Architectural type
  
Medieval, Norman and Neoclassicism

Completed
  
3 July 1763 (1763-07-03)

Address
  
Chiltern Hills AONB, West Wycombe Hill, Church Ln, High Wycombe HP14 3AP, UK

Similar
  
West Wycombe Park, Hellfire Caves, St Paul's Church - West Wyc, St Michael and All Angels C, Hughenden Manor

St Lawrence's Church is a Church of England church in the parish of West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England. It sits on top of West Wycombe Hill in a prominent position overlooking the West Wycombe Road, and surrounding villages. West Wycombe Hill is managed by the National Trust, although the church and graveyard are owned by the Church of England. The church resides in the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. St. Lawrence Church and the mausoleum both occupy similar positions on top of West Wycombe Hill, and the Church tower is visible for many miles around. On a clear day one is able to see West London easily from the highest public floor level on the church tower.

Contents

There has been a religious focus on this site since at least 635AD. The Grade I listed church was built in its current form from 1761, under instruction from Sir Francis Dashwood, 1st Baronet and Baron Le Despenser. It was officially reopened on 3 July 1763.

The spectacular 18th century remodelling of the Church was completed by the mid 1760s, The tower was raised to make it an eye-catcher from West Wycombe Estate, West Wycombe House and also from the West Wycombe road as one exits towards the West. Its crowning wooden finial of a great golden ball was possibly inspired by the Dogana, Venice, and was reputed to be a meeting place for the Hellfire Club – it could seat 10, and was described by the author John Wilkes as “the best globe tavern I was ever in”.

The interior of the Church is equally as spectacular. The nave has the appearance of a “very superb Egyptian hall”, inspired by that at Mereworth Church, and is said to have been derived from Robert Wood’s prints of the ancient Temple of the Sun, Palmyra. It has five arched windows of timber on each side, and is lined with engaged Corinthian columns under a continuous entablature. The painted ceiling is by Giovanni Borgnis, and there is spectacular Rococo plasterwork, on the ceiling, frieze and walls.

The primary building is made of flint, stone and brick construction and a gabled tile and copper roof. The building has undergone extensive rebuilding works during and after 1761, and since then, repair works have taken place every 40–50 years over the last two centuries.

St Lawrence's Church is known as the 'Summer Church' and St Paul's in the heart of the village is known as the 'Winter Church'. This is because until 1928 there was no road up to St Lawrence and no power until the 1970s.

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Architect

The drawings were by either of the architects Nicholas Revett or John Donowell. The architect is widely believed to be Nicholas Revett, who also worked on parts of the house at West Wycombe Park.

Revett published The Antiquities of Athens in 1763. Revett also completed the Temple of the Winds at West Wycombe Park in the same period - a project that one can presume he took inspiration from the Temple of the Winds he found on his Grand Tour, and that he discussed in detail in his publication. A year after the finishing of St. Lawrence Church he leaves for the Asia Minor to continue his grand tour, upon his return he publishes "The Antiquities of Ionia" in 1769.

Revett also designed the church of Ayot St Lawrence in Hertfordshire, again in the neoclassical style.

The Tower

The tower is 80 feet (24 m) tall, with the golden ball adding another 20 feet (6 m). The top is 646 feet (197 m) above sea level.

Bells

There are eight bells in the tower: the treble and second by Mears & Stainbank, 1923; the third by Lester and Pack, 1756; the fourth by Henry Knight, 1621; the fifth by Joseph Carter, 1581; the sixth by Henry Knight, 1620; the seventh by Lester and Pack, 1762; and the tenor by Thomas Mears, 1828.

Golden ball

The golden ball can be seen for miles around and is a recognised symbol of West Wycombe village. It is made from a wooden frame covered in gold leaf, 8 feet in diameter, and contains seating for up to six people. There were rumours that the Hellfire Club, founded by Sir Francis Dashwood (1708–1781), met inside the golden ball, but there is no evidence for that. It is no longer possible for the public to enter the ball. It has been suggested that Sir Francis Dashwood used a heliograph to signal through a porthole in the golden ball to his friend, John Norris (1721–1786), who had erected a tower, now known as the Camberley Obelisk, near his home at Hawley, Hampshire, 21 miles to the south.

The Nave

The church nave is of the neoclassical style with English-baroque elements, and forms the centrepiece of the 1763 remodelling project. The nave is lined with engaged Corinthian capped columns which imitate porphyry, a volcanic rock. The frescoes are painted by G.Borgnis and his son.

Churchyard

The churchyard contains eleven Commonwealth war graves, six from World War I and five from World War II.

Building Work

The Congregation has been fund-raising for several years in order to allow themselves to build the first major extension to the church in over 200 years. The churches goal is to build an extension which will provide a quality environment that is able to function as both a children's area whilst services are in process, and as a Sunday School for the churches thriving community. In 2015 the church engaged the current Church Architect, Joshua Harrison, to design a sensitive scheme which would be considered a fitting addition to the historic Grade 1 listed building.

The proposed extension adds a further single storey element to the front elevation creating approximately 20sq/m of new space, the eaves are low which result in a steep cat-slide roof with a roof hip which begins just below the nave entablature. The design shows four windows and 2 heritage style roof-lights. The architects 3D computer renders show an extension which extends beyond the Nave wall by approximately 1.5 metres, and has a door with a carved white stone frame. Previous to this proposed extension, there was a small stable building attached in the same area, though this was of a far smaller scale, with a much lower roof hip, and of a lesser architectural quality. It also extended only as far as the nave flank wall. It was demolished in the 1960s due to it being structurally unsound.

Among the many proposed interventions, one of the most significant is that of the design and insertion of a new high quality door and through-way, which will enter directly into the nave from the extension. Other interventions include the creation of a new community garden and improvements to an existing amenity to create further habitable space.

The architects submitted plans for the new extension in late 2015 and received planning permission in February 2016 after extensive consultation between the architects, Wycombe District Council, English Heritage, The National Trust and the Diocese of Oxford.

St. Lawrence Church can be seen in the new Bridget Jones film, coming out in the UK in 2016. It forms part of the opening scene in the March 23rd trailer release.

St. Lawrence Church has been used as a backdrop and as part of important scenery elements in various popular TV shows and films such as Downton Abbey and major blockbusters. It is also featured throughout the music video by Paloma Faith for her song "Picking up the Pieces" which has over 12,000,000 views on YouTube.

References

St Lawrence's Church, West Wycombe Wikipedia